An interesting situation happened to me today in Astana, Zhenis Avenue 25 at the Hippocrates pharmacy.Before that, I was there twice between November 1-10, I had an asthma attack, sputum, two young Kazakh saleswomen helped me a lot. I came in the evening at about 18:00, went to the cashier and asked to sell me Chlorhexidine. An elderly woman was standing at the cash register, she was immediately dissatisfied with something. I bought and sat on a chair to warm my feet, began to communicate with Kazakh and Russian friends via voice messages, helping them. I behaved politely, quietly, calmly. Then I wanted to change the Chlorhexidine to a fresher one, just to ask if there is one. He went up to the cash register and asked politely. The answer is: "we have one batch, get out to your Russia and buy there!" Then I said, "Okay," and left the pharmacy, even though it was unpleasant for me. I went to the market around the corner to look at honey for colds, returned to the pharmacy to ask your elderly Kazakh woman why she snapped at me. A man comes out from the side and starts yelling at me :You hear me, get out of here, I'll come out now and then you won't say hello. You are a coward, you ran away from the army, and my two sons are fighting for you now." Is this normal? I am of limited health, I did not run from anyone or anything, I arrived by train on November 1, I am leaving soon. Why can't I just buy medicine at the Hippocrates pharmacy and quietly leave without switching to my personality, insults? I am 39 years old, I am of limited use, my asthma attack has only recently ended and my lungs have not yet completely cleared of sputum. There are no particularly warm socks. Did you sit down to warm your feet for 10 minutes and become a criminal? Why do you keep such a rude woman and such a stupid man in your pharmacy who threatens customers with physical violence? I have a right leg after two operations, I get a fermatron - plus cut once a year! Are they completely idiots there?! 11/23/12. at about 18:00 everything was happening. And I also tried to help your saleswoman: an Uzbek woman came up and spoke Uzbek, so I specially handed your saleswoman a phone with a Google translator, she rudely replied "nothing is needed."
there are many different medicines or remedies for the treatment of health and prevention, but their prices are 20 percent higher than in an average pharmacy and the staff who worked there on the day of purchase did not know the use of Baziron